After more than three weeks of meticulously analyzing the Portland Trail Blazers roster, head coach, general manager and owner, the first leg of our You be the GM series has come to a close. A huge thank you to our panel of experts and to all of you for providing passionate and informed feedback. As we get ready to shift the focus to 2013 NBA draft prospects, here's a recap of which Blazers players you want to stay, and which players you want to hit the road.

Blazers with the largest percentage of "stay" votes:
Four Blazers met or topped the 90-percent mark, with Rookie of the Year Damian Lillard (not surprisingly) taking the top spot with 97 percent. Behind Lillard was Nicolas Batum, Will Barton and head coach Terry Stotts. Lillard's 97 percent was the highest total since Wesley Matthews earned a 98 percent stay after the 2010-11 season. For the fifth straight year, Batum finished with a 90 percent stay vote or better.

Blazers with the largest percentage of "go" votes:
As the saying goes, nice guys finish last. Unfortunately for Nolan Smith, a genuinely nice guy, he set the GM record for highest percentage of go votes with 97 percent. Not even Raymond Felton (nine percent stay last year) Darius Miles (six percent in 2005-06), Bonzi Wells, Rasheed Wallace, Zach Randolph or even Travis Diener (yup, went there) received such a high percentage of go votes in the previous 10 years of voting on OregonLive.com. So, congrats, Nolan Smith?

Blazers with the largest percentage decrease in "stay" votes:
Everyone's favorite stretch four, Luke Babbitt, after bouncing back nicely last year to earn an 80 percent stay, did a 180 this year with 83 percent of you telling him to hit the road.

JJ Hickson, who tied with Elliot Williams for the highest stay percentage last season at 95 percent, saw an exponential decrease in stay votes despite a career year. Hickson finished with just a 52-percent stay vote this time around, dropping a whopping 43 percentage points.

Nolan Smith (see above) went from 64 percent stay last season to just three percent stay this year.

Most popular votes:
With over 3,200 votes, Hickson was the most voted member of the Blazers this year. Leonard was right behind Hickson with just under 3,000 votes.

Miscellaneous:
*In lieu of a Stay or Go vote on rookie Meyers Leonard, we asked the question: Is Meyers Leonard the Blazers' center of the future? 82 percent responded yes.
**As with Leonard, rather than asking Stay or Go for the head honchos Neil Olshey and Paul Allen, we asked you to grade their 2012-13 seasons. Olshey, who jumped right into the fire when hired nearly a year ago, was given a B grade by 51 percent of voters and an A by 36 percent of voters after his busy first year in Portland. And as noted above, Allen produced similar numbers after a quiet year at the top. In summary: after a 33-49 season, the two biggest decision makers on the basketball side of the Trail Blazers operation received passing grades.